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Class of Eighty-Three 
amljerst College 



RECORD: 1883-1903 



Springfield, Mass. 

Press of The F. A. Bassette Company 

1903 



\3 






INTRODUCTORY 

IN the preparation of this record, it has not seemed 
wise to present a detailed account of the doings 
of the members of the class. It is hoped that 
enough is given under each name to make a clear 
and satisfactory presentation of the work the class is 
doing in the world, as a whole and as individuals. 

The record testifies to earnest purpose, high am- 
bition and successful endeavor. 



William Orr. 



Springfield, Mass., 
May, 1903. 



CLASS RECORD 

1883=1903 

EVERETT ANDERSON ABORN 

LAWYER 

He taught from 1883 to 1885. In 1887, he gradu- 
ated from the Union College of Law, Chicago, Illi- 
nois. Since then he has practiced in Chicago. 

Degrees:M..A. (in course), Amherst, 1886; LL.B., 
Lake Forest University, 1887. 

Address: 121 2 Washington Boulevard, Chicago, 
Illinois. 

CHARLES SULLIVAN ADAMS 

LAWYER 

He was in business for two years after gradua- 
tion. From 1885 to 1887 he studied law. Since 
1887 he has practiced in Jacksonville, Florida. He 
is now secretary of the Florida Abstract and Title 
Security Company. 

Adams lost his house and office with their con- 
tents in the great fire of May 3, 1901. 

He was married September 25, 1889, to Claudia 
Cornelia L'Engle of Jacksonville, Florida, who died 
February 11, 1895. Adams married February 17, 
1898, Ella Belle MacDonell of Jacksonville. He has 
one child: 

Emily Marion Adams, born July 5. 1901. 



IO RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Degree: LL.B., Boston University, 1887. 
Addresses: Business, 25 Ocean Street: Home, 25 
Lomax Street, Jacksonville, Florida. 

JOHN ROGERS AYER 

CIVIL ENGINEER 

He taught for a short time after graduation, and 
then engaged in farming until 1891. Since that date 
he has been employed as civil engineer and surveyor. 
Until 1903, he was in this work in Yonkers, New 
York. April 1 of the present year, he removed to 
Richmond, Massachusetts. 

Ayer was married September 23, 1885, to Caro- 
line Hall Rankin of Newark, New Jersey. 

Address: Richmond, Massachusetts. 

CLINTON JIRAH BACKUS 

TEACHER 

He taught from 1883 to 1897, when he became 
president of the Alaska Commercial Company. This 
position he held until 1899, when he resumed his 
position as Principal of Baldwin Seminary. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Backus was married June 6, 1886, to Carrie L. 
Haskins of Spokane Falls, Washington. He has four 
children : 

Clinton Jirah, Jr., born September 22, 1887; 

David Hiram, born March 7, 1893; 

Romayne, born March 5, 1895; 

Una, born January 22, 1897. 

Address: Baldwin Seminary, St. Paul, Minne- 
sota. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE II 

EDWARD ERASTUS BANCROFT 

PHYSICIAN 

He studied at Harvard Medical School from 
1883 to 1886. From 1886 to 1887, he practiced at 
Waltham, Massachusetts. Since 1887 he has been 
in practice at Wellesley, Massachusetts. 

Degree: M.D., Harvard University, 1886. 

Bancroft was married August 6, 1890, to Jose- 
phine A. Given of Bowdoinham, Maine. He has three 
children : 

Margaret, born July 20, 1891; 

Richard, born December 26, 1892; 

Philip, born October 12, 1897. 

Address: Wellesley, Massachusetts. 

DARWIN LONG BARDWELL 

SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS 

He taught from 1883 to 1898, when he became 
conductor of Teachers' Institutes in New York 
State. In 1899 he was elected Superintendent of 
Schools at Binghamton, New York. In October, 
1902, he was chosen District Superintendent of 
Schools for the Borough of Richmond. His appoint- 
ment called forth favorable newspaper comment on 
his fitness for the place and on the excellence of his 
work in various capacities. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1888. 

Bardwell was married December 28, 1885, to 
Alice M. Babb of Champaign, Illinois. He has two 
children : 

Harold E., born December 12, 1886; 

Darwin Eugene, born June 8, 1896. 

Address: Office of the District Superintendent 
of Schools, Stapleton, New York. 



12 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

WALLACE CLARKE BOYDEN 

TEACHER 

He taught from 1883 to 1889 at Stoughton, 
Massachusetts, and in Williston Seminary at East- 
hampton, Massachusetts. In 1889, he became a Master 
in the Boston (Massachusetts) Normal School. This 
position he held until 1900, when he was elected 
Headmaster of that school. 

He has served on school committees in East- 
hampton and in Newtonville. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Publications: A First Book in Algebra: Silver, 
Burdett & Co., Boston, Massachusetts. The Teach- 
ing of Arithmetic: Kasson & Palmer, Boston, Massa- 
chusetts. Thomas Boyden and His Descendants (in 
conjunction with Messrs. M. M. and A. J. Boyden). 

Boyden was married July 8, 1885, to Mabel Ros- 
siter Wetherbee of Marshfield Hills, Massachusetts. 
He has three children: 

Robert Wetherbee, born March 7, 1889; 

Alice Gordon, born July 18, 1892; 

Bartlett Wetherbee, born October 2, 1899. 

Address: 221 Walnut Street, Newtonville, Mass- 
achusetts. 

HOWARD ALLEN BRIDGMAN 

JOURNALIST 

He taught for a year after graduation, and then, 
from 1884 to 1885, studied at the Hartford Theologi- 
cal Seminary. He continued his studies at Yale 
Divinity School, from which he graduated in 1887. 
From 1887 to 1890 he was Associate Editor of The 
Congregationalist. Since 1891 he has been managing 
Editor of The Congregationalist. He was a student 
at the Oxford (England) Summer School of Theology 
in 1894. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 13 

Degree: B.D., Yale, May, 1887. 

Publications: Chapter on " Congregationalists in 
Literature," in Albert E. Dunning's work, on "Con- 
gregationalists in America: J. A. Hill & Co., New- 
York City, 1894. Bridgman has done much writing 
for various periodicals, as: The Review of Reviews, 
Century, Woman's Home Companion, Record of Chris- 
tian Work, and The Young Man of London. 

He was married July 27, 1898, to Helen North 
Bryant of Wetherbee, New York, and has two chil- 
dren: 

Harriet, born August 26, 1899; 

Edwin Bbyant, born November 21, 1901. 

His home is in Brookline, Massachusetts. 

Address: 14 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachu- 
setts. 

CHARLES HENRY BUTLER 

CLERGYMAN 

He taught for two years after graduation, and 
then studied theology. In 1887 he graduated from 
the Union Theological Seminary of New York City. 
After a short term of service as pastor of the English 
Lutheran Church of Frostburg, Maryland, he trav- 
elled in Europe from 1888 to 1889. He was for three 
years assistant pastor of the Luther Place Memorial 
Church of Washington, D. C. Since 1892 he has been 
pastor of the Keller Memorial Lutheran Church of 
Washington. He has been for some years an in- 
structor in the Theological Department of Howard 
University. 

Degrees: M.A., Columbian University, 1882 ; B.D., 
Union Theological Seminary, 1887. 

Address: 1107 Eleventh Street, N. W., Wash- 
ington, D. C. 



14 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

EDWIN HALLOCK BYINGTON 

CLERGYMAN 

He was for a year Secretary of the Armory Hill 
Young Men's Christian Association, Springfield, Mass- 
achusetts. He then studied theology at Hartford 
and Auburn Theological Seminaries. He graduated 
from the latter school in 1887. Byington was for 
four years pastor of the Eastern Avenue Congrega- 
tional Church of Springfield, Massachusetts. From 
1891 to June, 1900, he was assistant pastor of the 
Church of the Pilgrims of Brooklyn, New York, and 
in charge of Pilgrim Chapel. Since June, 1900, he 
has been pastor of the Dane Street Congregational 
Church of Beverly, Massachusetts. 

Degree: B.D., Auburn Theological Seminary, 
May, 1887. 

Publications: Out-door Preaching: Student Pub- 
lishing Company, Hartford, Connecticut. Chart of 
Jewish National History: John D. Walters & Co., New 
York and Philadelphia. Turkey and Turkish Prob- 
lems (16 pp.): W. L. Greene & Co. 

Byington was married September 2, 1891, to 
Sophia Weston Janes of Springfield, Massachusetts. 
He has had three children: 

Theodore Linn, born July 27, 1892; died July 
30, 1892; 

Ruth, born May 4, 1897; 

Paul, born November — , 1898. 

Address: 5 Judson Street, Beverly, Massachu- 
setts. 

EDWARD AUGUSTUS CAHOON 

BANKER 

He was in business in the West from 1883 to 
1887, when he became a clerk in the Albuquerque 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 1 5 

(New Mexico) National Bank. July, 1890, he was 
elected cashier of the Bank of Roswell, New Mexico. 

Cahoon is prominent in the political and social 
life of Roswell. He has been mayor of Roswell and 
is a regent of the New Mexico Military Institute. 

Cahoon was married April 26, 1894, to Mabel 
Howell of Merced, California, and has three children: 

Katharine, born January 23 1895; 

Louise, born September 7, 1897; 

Mabel, born August 10, 1902. 

Mrs. Cahoon died October 24, 1902. 

Address: Roswell, Chaves County, New Mexico. 

JOHN ANDREW CALLAHAN 
teacher 

He taught for a year at Barre, Massachusetts, 
and then became principal of the Nonotuck Grammar 
School of Holyoke, where he remained until 1901, 
when he was appointed principal of the Highlands 
School in the same city. He has secured a very fine 
art collection for his building. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Publication: Chart of Longitude and Time. 

Address: 131 Lincoln Street, Holyoke, Massa- 
chusetts 

ISRAEL FOLSOM CHESLEY 

BUSINESS 

He was engaged in manufacturing in Pittsfield, 
Massachusetts, from 1883 to 1894, when he became 
manager of the firm of Chesley & Co., Wool and 
Noils, Boston, Massachusetts. At the time of his 
reply to the circular for this book, he was residing 
temporarily at Amesbury, Massachusetts. His busi- 
ness and home had been broken up by the death of 



16 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Mrs. Chesley, October 20, 1902, in Denver, Colorado. 

Chesley was married October 31, 1883, to Bertha 
Madalena Russell of Pittsfield, Massachusetts. He 
has had four children : 

Solomon Russell, born March 29, 1885 (the 
Class Boy) ; 

Israel Folsom, Jr., born November 28, 1887; 
died May 10, 1891 ; 

Franklin Russell, born December 1, 1889; 

Malcolm, born May 20, 1891. 

Address: Amesbury, Massachusetts. (Temporary.) 

WALTER CLAYTON CLAPP 

CLERGYMAN 

He studied medicine for a year after graduation, 
and then taught in a boys' school in New York from 
1884 to 1885. He then studied in the General Theo- 
logical Seminary of New York, from which he gradu- 
ated in 1888. He was in the Episcopal ministry for 
four years. From 1892 to 1894 he was a professor 
of Exegesis in the Theological Seminary at Nashotah, 
Wisconsin. He studied theology for two years in 
Washington and then re-entered the work of the 
Episcopal ministry. From 1896 to 1898 he was 
curate in Saint Clement's Church, Philadelphia, and 
from September, 1898, to August, 1901, he was rector 
of Saint John's Church of Toledo, Ohio. Since No- 
vember, 1 90 1, he has been a missionary in the Phil- 
ippine Islands. 

Degree: B.D., General Theological Seminary, 
New York City, 1888. 

Clapp was married April 12, 1899, to Charlotte 
Kern of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Mrs. Clapp 
died February 15, 1902, in Shanghai, China. 

Address: Manila, Philippine Islands. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE I 7 

IRVING EDWARD COMINS 

BUSINESS 

He has been in the woolen business in Rochdale, 
Massachusetts, since graduation. In 1885 he became 
a member of the firm of Comins & Co. 

Comins served on the City Council of Worcester 
from 1890 to 1894. He was president of that body 
in 1893 and 1894. He was for two years president 
of the Worcester Board of Trade. 

Comins was married June 8, 1887, to Etta 
Rosella Leonard of Worcester, Massachusetts. He 
has had two children: 

Edward Irving, born March 12, 1889; 

Leonard Clark, born July 18, 1885; died Janu- 
ary 12, 1896. 

Address: 12 Hawthorn Street, Worcester, Mass- 
achusetts. 

THOMAS LAMB COMSTOCK 

lumber business 

He has been in the lumber business in Turners 
Falls since graduation. In 1887 he became director 
and treasurer of the Turners Falls Lumber Company, 
and has since that date been president of the New 
England Fibre Company. 

Comstock was married September 16, 1891, to 
Eliza Perkins Grinnell Ripley of Greenfield, Massa- 
chusetts. Mrs. Comstock and an infant son died 
June 17, 1897. 

Address: Greenfield, Massachusetts. 

FRANK ETHRIDGE COTTON 

BUSINESS 

He taught for a year and then entered the 
lumber business, where he remained until 1888. 



z g RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

From 1888 to 1892 he was cashier for the St. 
Louis Steam Heating and Ventilating Company. Since 
1892 he has been confidential clerk for the Russell 
Counter Company of Woburn, Massachusetts. 

Cotton was married November 12, 1889, to 
Annie C. Putney of Stoneham, Massachusetts. He 
has two children: 

Edith Frances, born October 12, 1890; 

Rachel Ethridge, born April 23, 1894. 

Address: 92 Pleasant Street, Woburn, Massa- 
chusetts. 

AVERY FAYETTE CUSHMAN 

LAWYER 

He graduated from the Boston University Law 
School in 1885, and was admitted to the Suffolk 
County bar, July 21 of the same year. Since then he 
has practiced law in New York City; until April 27, 
1903, with Goodrich, Deady and Goodrich, at 59 Wall 
Street, and after that date in partnership with 
Stephen P. Cushman, in the Orient Building, 79 
Wall Street. 

Degree: LL.B., Boston University, June, 1885. 

Cushman was married June 14, 1888, to Mary 
Adelaide Hedden of East Orange, New Jersey. He 
has had two children: 

Dorothy, born January 18, 1890; died January 
19, 1890; 

Caroline, born January 17, 1893. 

Cushman resides in Brooklyn, New York. 

Address: 79 Wall Street, New York City. 

CHRISTAKES APOSTOLOS DEREBEY 

PHYSICIAN 

He studied theology at Hartford and Andover, 
and graduated from the latter institution in 1886. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 19 

From 1886 to 1890 he was engaged in pastoral work 
in Maine. He was pastor of the First Congregational 
Church at Clintonville, Wisconsin, from 1890 to 1893. 
He studied medicine at the Northwestern Medical 
College of Chicago, Illinois, and graduated in 1897. 
Since that date he has practiced medicine in Chicago. 
Derebey is interested in missionary work among the 
Greeks in Chicago. 

Degrees: B.D., Andover Theological Seminary, 
1886; M.D., Northwestern Medical College, 1897. 

He was married October 3, 1888, to Nellie Frances 
Pease of Cornish, Maine, and has three children: 

Harold Pericles, born July 5, 1889; 

Franklin Pease, born February 19, 1892; 

Chester Howard, born October 19, 1897. 

Address: 2524 North Forty-second Street, Chi- 
cago, Illinois. 

ALMON JESSE DYER 

CLERGYMAN 

After graduating from the Hartford Theological 
Seminary in 1886, he became pastor of the Congrega- 
tional Church of Upton, Massachusetts. He remained 
in this position until 1892, when he was chosen pastor 
of the First Congregational Church of North Brook- 
field, Massachusetts. He gave up this charge in 1896. 
From February to September, 1897, he was acting 
pastor for the East Church of Ware, Massachusetts. 
Since the latter date he has been pastor of the Con- 
gregational Church of Sharon, Massachusetts. 

Degree: B.D., Hartford Theological Seminary, 
1886. 

Dyer was married May 25, 1886, to Lizzie Jane 
Lovell of Cummington, Massachusetts. He has one 
child: 

Ruth Elizabeth, born March 10, 1889. 

Address: Sharon, Massachusetts. 



20 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

HENRY FAIRBANK 

MISSIONARY IN INDIA 

He graduated from the Yale Divinity School in 
1886, and was ordained a missionary at Hatfield, 
Massachusetts, May 27, 1886. The sermon was by 
President Julius H. See lye. 

Fairbank was married to Ruby Elizabeth Hard- 
ing, in Sholapur, India, September 16, 1886. Since 
1886, he has been in missionary service in India, with 
the exception of a year's furlough in the United 
States from 1893 to 1894, and another absence from 
October, 1898, to September, 1899, when he was at 
Colorado Springs for the health of Mrs. Fairbank. 
He returned to the United States in the summer of 
1902 and found Mrs. Fairbank so much improved 
that she returned with him to India in the fall of 
that year. Fairbank has three children: 

Samuel Ballantine, born December 7, 1887; 

Allan Melvin, born September 27, 1889; 

Ruth Elizabeth, born February 29, 1892. 

Degree: B.D., Yale Divinity School, 1886. 

Address: Ahmednagar, India. 

WALTER TAYLOR FIELD 

BUSINESS 

From 1883 to 1886 he was proof and manu- 
script reader for S. C. Griggs & Co., Chicago, Illinois. 
He was for a year associate editor of The Advance, 
Chicago, Illinois. From 1887 to 1890, he was corres- 
pondent for Harper Brothers' Western Department, 
Chicago, Illinois. Since 1890, he has been manager 
of the Chicago branch of Ginn & Co. 

Field was married December 6, 1892, to Sarah 
Lounsberry Peck of Chicago, Illinois. He has two 
children : 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 2 1 

Walter Donald, born August 8, 1895; 

Ruth Alden, born July 14, 1898. 

Address: 378-38S Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 

Illinois. 

FRANK HERBERT FITTS 

BUSINESS 

He was interested in the manufacture of fertili- 
zers in Boston, Massachusetts, from 1883 to 1888. 
Since the latter year he has been engaged in the 
wholesale grain business in the Brighton District, 
Boston, Massachusetts. Until 1900 he was in the 
firm of Fitts & Tarbell, but since then in business 
by himself. 

Fitts was married June 21, 1888, to Mary Glea- 
son Collins of Brighton District, Boston. He has 
one child: 

Adela Frances, born November 26, 1895. 

Mrs. Fitts died May 13, 1901.. 

Address: 80 Oakland Street, Brighton District, 
Boston, Massachusetts. 

GEORGE BYRON FOSTER 

BUSINESS 

He was for a year after graduation with D. 
Lothrop & Co., and then for two years with Pulsifer, 
Jordan & Pfaff of Boston, Massachusetts. From 1886 
to 1900 he was a clerk in the Massachusetts National 
Bank. Foster is now in the treasurer's office of the 
Boston and Albany Railroad. 

He was married November 5, 1896, to Margaret 
V. Brooks of Boston. Since the last reunion Foster 
has been bereaved of his wife and an infant daughter. 

Address: 15 Vernon Street, Brookline, Massa- 
chusetts. 



2 2 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

EDWIN FOWLER 

BUSINESS 

From 1883 to 1884, he was a student of civil engi- 
neering and mechanical drawing at Gouverneur, New 
York, and from 1884 to 1888 an examiner of titles and 
stenographer for the Central Loan and Land Com- 
pany of Emporia, Kansas. In 1888 he became secretary 
and director of the Central Loan Debenture Company 
of Kansas City, Kansas. In 1902 Fowler was an 
investor's agent (Investor's Agency Corporation), 
Kansas City, Kansas. 

He was married September 8, 1886, to Jennie 
Brodie of Gouverneur, New York. He has five 
children : 

Margaret, born July 28, 1888; 

Helen, born July 20, 1890; 

Katherine, born October 8, 1897; 

Edwin Brodie, born December 18, 1899; 

Elizabeth Brodie, born November 18, 1901. 

Address: 307 Husted Building, Kansas City, 
Kansas. 

ENOCH WINFIELD FRENCH 

business 

He was in the United States signal service from 
1883 to 1888. After the latter date he was probate 
judge and superintendent of schools of Yorapai 
County, Arizona. He is now in the railroad contract- 
ing business. 

French was married September 15, 1887, to 
Adaline M. Moore of Prescott, Arizona. He has 
two children: 

Olive Louise, born May 31, 1888; 

George Marshall, born November 22, 1889. 

Address : Prescott, Arizona. (Care of Grant Bros.) 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 27, 

JONATHAN GREENLEAF 

CLERGYMAN 

He graduated from the Union Theological Semi- 
nary of New York City in 1886. From 1886 to 1900 
he served as pastor of Presbyterian churches in New 
York and Pennsylvania. October 1, 1900, he became 
pastor of the Presbyterian Church of Sparta, New 
Jersey. He was elected permanent clerk of the 
Presbytery of Newton, April 22, 1902. 

Degrees: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886; B.D., 
Union Theological Seminary, 1886. 

Greenleaf was married July 6, 1887, to Laurette 
May Dutton of Milford, N. H. He has three children: 

Jonathan Parsons, born May 2, 1888; 

Annie Elizabeth, born September 5, 1894; 

Charles Scott, born November 5, 1897. 

Address: Sparta, New Jersey. 

MARTIN LUTHER GRIFFIN 
ANALYTICAL chemist 

He was engaged in practical chemistry for man- 
ufacturers at Holyoke from 1883 to 1892, and was 
also consulting chemist for the Hudson River and 
Water Power Company of Mechanicsville, New York, 
from 1885 to 1893. He moved from Holyoke to 
Albany, New York, January 1, 1892. Since 1892 
he has been chemist for the Duncan Company of 
Mechanicsville, N. Y. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Publications: The Evolution of the Sulphite 
Digester; various scientific and technical papers; 
winner of ^10 prize offered by Scottish Paper Makers 
Association, 1901. 

Elected member of Society of Chemical Industry, 
London, England May 24, 1886. 



24 



RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 



Griffin was married March 30, 1894, to Ada 
Juliette Riggs of Albany, New York. He has two 
children : 

Artcher Estabrook, born December 4, 1899; 

Carroll Riggs, born May 30, 1902. 

Address: Mechanicsville, Saratoga County, New 
York. 

EDWARD ALLEN GUERNSEY 

He taught for two years in Maryland and Wis- 
consin, and then spent a year in the study of Latin 
and Greek at Amherst. From 1886 to 1887 he taught 
in Straight University, New Orleans. He was in 
business in St. Paul and Minneapolis for nine years. 
In 1896, he became advertising manager for the I vers 
& Pond Piano Company of Boston, Massachusetts. 
This position he still retains. 

Guernsey was married November 10, 1888, to 
Helen C. Shipman of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 

Address: 4 Allston Heights, Boston, Massachu- 
setts 

SAMUEL WORTHINGTON HALLETT 

TEACHER 

From 1883 to 1897 he taught in Ware, Barn- 
stable and New Bedford. In 1897 ne became super- 
intendent of schools and principal of the High School 
at Ware, Massachusetts. In 1900 he became super- 
intendent of schools at Ware, and held this posi- 
tion until 1902. He has studied at the Hyannis 
State Normal School and at Clark University. During 
the present year he has studied education at the 
graduate school of Harvard University. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1887. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 25 

Hallett was married June 29, 1898, to Bertha 
Lovell of Osterville, Massachusetts. 

Address: Hyannis, Massachusetts. 

WALTER LEWIS HALLETT 

PHYSICIAN 

He graduated from the Harvard Medical School 
in 1886. He practiced medicine for seven years at 
Mansfield, Massachusetts. Since 1893 he has been in 
practice in Brockton, Massachusetts. 

Degree: M.D., Harvard, 1886. 

Hallett was married September 24, 1 891, to Kate 
S. Williams of Easton, Massachusetts. Mrs. Hallett 
died August 2, 1895. 

Address: 46 High Street, Brockton, Massachu- 
setts. 

CHARLES WOODMAN HAMILTON 

BUSINESS 

He was in the lumber business for a year after 
graduation, and then entered the office of the Mil- 
waukee Harvester Company, where he remained until 
1898. For the last five years he was secretary and 
treasurer of this company. Since 1898, he has been 
proprietor of the Milwaukee Lace Paper Company. 

Hamilton was married September 6, 1888, to 
Elizabeth Frazier Noyes of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 
He has two children: 

Raymond No yes, born September 1, 1889; 

Kenneth Charles, born April 17, 1892. 

Address: 3100 Grand Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis- 
consin. 



2 6 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

FREDERICK WILLIAM HAMLIN 

PHYSICIAN 

He taught for two years and then studied medi- 
cine at the New York Homeopathic Medical College 
from 1885 to 1888. Since 1888, he has practiced in 
New York City. He is Associate Professor of Ob- 
stetrics in the New York Homeopathic Medical Col- 
lege and Hospital. 

Degree: M.D., New York Homeopathic College, 
1888. 

Hamlin was married November 9, 1893, to 
Gertrude Sherman of New York City. 

Address: 130 West Forty-eighth Street, New 
York City. 

DAVID PHILLIPS HATCH 

CLERGYMAN 

He graduated from Hartford Theological Semi- 
nary in 1886. He was engaged in pastoral work in 
Maine and New Jersey until 1899. From November 
1, 1899, to June 1, 1902, he was without charge at 
Lawrence, Massachusetts. From June 1, 1902, to 
April, 1903, he was in Weston and Melrose, Massachu- 
setts. April 12, 1903, Hatch was installed as pastor 
of the Congregational Church at Franklin, New 
Hampshire. 

Degree: B.D., Hartford Theological Seminary, 
May, 1886. 

He was married October 27, 1 886 , to Caroline Pat- 
ton of Washington, D. C. Mrs. Hatch died January 
19, 1893. Hatch was married January 9, 1895, to 
Cora Euretta Johnson of Williamstown, Massachu- 
sett. He has had one child: 

Helen Winslow, born December 11, 1895; died 
December 13, 1897. 

Address: Franklin, New Hampshire. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 27 

FOSTER STRONG HAVEN 

PHYSICIAN 

He graduated from the College of Physicians and 
Surgeons of New York City, in 1886. Since then he has 
practiced medicine in New York City. 

Degree: M.D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, 
1886. 

Address: 143 West Sixty-first Street, New York 
City. 

(Haven has answered no letters, and all attempts 
to secure information from him for the class-book 
have failed. He is known to be at the above address, 
and is reported as successful in practice.) 

WILLIE PERKINS HOLCOMBE 

LAWYER 

He studied law for three years after leaving Am- 
herst, and graduated from the Boston University Law 
School in 1886. He won the Johnston prize for the 
best essay on a legal topic. Since 1886 he has prac- 
ticed law in Boston. 

Degree: LL.B., Boston University, June 2, 1886. 

Holcombe was married October 10, 1895, to 
Harriet L. Hilliard of Boston, Massachusetts. He 
has three children: 

Louise Brooks, born September 9, 1896; 

Harriet Dudley, born November 19, 1899; 

Alice Perkins, born June 10, 1901. 

Address: 27 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts. 

FRED ROGERS HOLT 

CLERK 

He graduated from the Baptist Theological Sem- 
inary of Rochester, New York, in 1886. For seven 



28 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

years he was in church and Young Men's Christian 
Association work in New York. Since 1S93 he has 
been a clerk with Sibley, Lindsay & Curr of Roches- 
ter, New York. 

Degrees: B.D., Rochester Theological Seminary, 
1886; M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1888. 

Holt was married August 5, 1886, to Fannie 
Elizabeth Heath of Rochester, New York. 

Address: 417 Hayward Avenue, Rochester, 
New York. 

GEORGE ELLSWORTH HOOKER 

(In service, Hull House, Chicago) 

He studied at the Columbia Law School for two 
years and then practiced in New York City until 1887. 
After a course of three years at Union Theological 
Seminary, New York City, and at Yale Divinity 
School, he served as pastor for three years in Wash- 
ington. In 1893 and 1894 he was a worker at the 
South End, Andover House, Boston, Massachusetts. 
He spent a year in travel and study in Europe. Since 
1895 he has been connected with the Hull House of 
Chicago. When last heard from he was taking a trip 
abroad for study and rest. 

Degrees: LL.B., Columbia Law School, 1885; 
B.D., Yale Divinity School, 1890. 

Publications: Too Many Weak and Rival Church- 
es in Eastern Washington; Hull House Recreation 
Guide; Syllabus for Reading Circles on Municipal 
Topics; Report on Chicago Street Railways (350 pp., 
published by City Council, 1898). Editorial writing 
for Chicago Daily Tribune, 1899 to 1902. 

Address: Hull House, Chicago, Illinois. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 



2 9 



HEZEKIAH SEYMOUR HOUGHTON 

PHYSICIAN 

He studied at Bellevue Hospital Medical College 
from 1883 to 1886. He was for a year house surgeon 
at Bellevue Hospital. After a long illness from ty- 
phoid fever, September to December, 1887, he went 
abroad for two years of study. Since 1889 he has 
been in practice in New York City. Houghton is a 
member of the New York Academy of Medicine, and 
of the County Medical Society and Association of 
New York. 

Degrees: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886; M.D., 
Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1886. 

Houghton was married January 5, 1888, to Sarah 
Preston of Irvington, New York. He has three chil- 
dren: 

Florence Preston, born June 28, 1889; 

Helene Seymour, born June 8, 1891; 

Henry Seymour, born January 3, 1896. 

Address: 301 West Eighty-eighth Street, New 
York City. 

DAVID BRAINARD HOWLAND 

JOURNALIST 

He was in newspaper work in Northampton and 
Rutland, Vermont, from 1883 to 1887, and local 
editor of the Springfield Republican from 1887 to 1895. 
In 1895 he became editor of the Worcester (Massachu- 
setts) Evening Gazette. Howland's health broke down 
in the summer of 1899, and he was compelled to give 
up all active work for nearly three years. September, 
1902, he was appointed to a position on the editorial 
staff of the Providence (Rhode Island) Journal. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Howland was married November 14, 1901, to 



30 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Emily Bliss, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. 
Starkweather of Northampton, Massachusetts. 

Address: Editorial Department, Providence 
Journal, Providence, Rhode Island. 

ALVA LINCOLN HYDE 

LAWYER 

He was in the lumber business at Southbridge, 
Massachusetts, from 1883 to 1892. He then studied 
law and took up probate practice and the manage- 
ment of real estate. 

Hyde was married May 12, 1885, to Lulu L. 
Whitford of Southbridge, Massachusetts. Mrs. Hyde 
died May 19, 1895. He was married August 11, 1897, 
to Sadie S. Cairns of Southbridge, Massachusetts. 
Hyde has two children: 

Elizabeth Lincoln, born May 17, 1886; 

Phyllis Evangeline, born August 21, 1898. 

Address: Southbridge, Massachusetts. 

FREDERICK KENDALL 

BUSINESS 

He was in the lumber business in Wisconsin and 
Kansas from 1883 to 1894, and bookkeeper for the 
Dells Paper and Pulp Company of Eau Claire, Wis- 
consin, from 1894 to January 10, 1901. Since the 
latter date he became vice-president and treasurer 
of the Great Falls Lumber Company of Great Falls, 
Montana. In May, 1903, he became interested in 
the Weston Iron Works of Los Angeles, California. 

Kendall was married September 10, 1890, to 
Asenath Candy of St. Louis, Missouri. He has one 
child: 

Rachel Hubbard, born January 15, 1892. 

Address: Los Angeles, California. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 31 

JOSEPH RAMSDELL KINGMAN 

LAWYER 

He studied law for two years in an office in 
Minneapolis, and then began the practice of his pro- 
fession. Since 1898 he has been a member of the 
firm of Woods, Kingman and Wallace. 

Kingman was married October 21, 1891, to 
Mabel Stanley Selden of Minneapolis. He has had 
two children : 

Elizabeth Ramsdell, born September 24, 1892; 
died July 21, 1900; 

Joseph Ramsdell, Jr., born June 18, 1900. 

Address: 909 New York Life Building, Minne- 
apolis, Minnesota. 

FRANKLIN HENRY KNIGHT 

LAWYER 

He studied history and political economy for 
three years, and from 1886 to 1889 studied law in 
Hartford and at Columbia College Law School. 
He practiced law in New York City from 1889 to 
1897, and from 1897 to 1903, he followed his profes- 
sion in Hartford. He then removed to New York. 

Degree: A.B., Amherst, 1889. 

Address: 40 West Twenty-seventh Street, New 
York City. 

WILBERT BLANCHARD LEW 

VETERINARY SURGEON 

He studied veterinary medicine at Battle Creek, 
Michigan, from 1883 to 1888. After a year spent as 
a clerk in Northampton, he took up the practice of 
veterinary medicine in Florence and Amherst. 



32 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Lew was married August 19, 1882, to Hattie 
Burghardt of Amherst, Massachusetts. 
Address: Amherst, Massachusetts. 

THEODORE GRAHAM LEWIS 

LAWYER 

He studied at the Harvard Law School from 
1883 to 1886, and was admitted to the New York 
bar in November, 1887. From 1886 to 189 1 he 
practiced law in New York City. As the result of 
ill health he removed to Denver in 1891 and con- 
tinued his practice there until 1897. February 1, 
1897, he entered the Contract Department of the 
Chicago Edison Company, and remained until Jan- 
uary 1, 1899. He then practiced law for a year, and 
in June, 1900, removed to New York. He is engaged 
in law practice and writes popular scientific articles 
for various magazines. He was for a short time 
editor of The Electrical Age. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Address: 44 Broad Street, New York City. 

JOHN WATKINS LOW 

From 1883 to 1885 he was in newspaper work 
and then for two years he was in business in Middle- 
town, New York. After a brief term of service as 
private secretary to his father, he took up real estate 
business in Middletown, where he remained until 
1 89 1, when he entered business in New York City. 
He is said to be a reporter and writer for the New 
York Evening Sun. 

Low was married December 20, 1889, to Rose 
McChesney Scott of Middletown, New York. 

Address: Evening Sun, New York City. 

(No replies to circulars of this reunion.) 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 33 

COREY FULLER McFARLAND 

BUSINESS 

He was engaged in the flour business in St. 
Louis, Memphis, and Charleston, Illinois, from 1883 
to 1895. Since the latter date he has been a partner 
in the Rees-McFarland Paper Company of Keokuk, 
Iowa. 

McFarland was married November 4, 1887, to 
Mamie D. Fizer of Memphis, Tennessee. He has one 
child : 

Malcolm, born May 5, 1890. 

Address: 21 South Fifth Street, Keokuk, Iowa. 

JOHN HART MANNING 

TEACHER 

He taught in Barnstable, Massachusetts, and at 
Toulon, Illinois, from 1883 to 1887. In 1888 he be- 
came principal of the High School at Groton, Massa- 
chusetts. He now combines the duties of superin- 
tendent of schools with those of high school principal. 
He is a trustee of the public library. 

Manning was married September 2, 1886, to 
Mary Frances Woodbridge of Andover, Massachu- 
setts. He has one child: 

Mervyn Mason, born June 21, 1888 

Address: Groton, Massachusetts. 

FRANK BALLARD MARSH 

BUSINESS 

He was in business in New York City and Spring- 
field, Massachusetts, from 1883 to 1896. He then 
became secretary and treasurer of the Theodore Rick- 
secker Company, 74 Reade Street, New York City. 

Marsh was married October 3, 1888, to Marion 



34 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Bolton of Brooklyn, New York. He has three chil- 
dren: 

Edward Henry, born November 3, 1889; 

Marion Penelope, born December 20, 1894; 

Morrison, born September 6, 1901. 

Address: 326 Clermont Avenue, Brooklyn, New 
York. 

CALVIN HENRY MORSE 

HOTEL BUSINESS 

Until 1886 Morse was in business in the North- 
west and in Ware, Massachusetts. Since 1886 he has 
been in the hotel business in Colorado. He is now 
proprietor of the Oxford Hotel, Denver, Colorado. 

Morse was married November 14, 1889, to 
Adelaide Sanderson of Athens-on-Hudson, New York. 
He has three children: 

Josephine Olive, born September 3, 1890; 

Carl Gantley, born September 10, 1892; 

Bradbury Bedell, born August 9, 1898. 

Address: Oxford Hotel, Denver, Colorado. 

HENRY CLARK NASH, Jr. 
lawyer 

After a year spent as a clerk in Millington, New 
Jersey, he took up the study of law in Amherst, and 
was admitted to the Hampshire County bar, March 
2, 1887. Since then he has practiced law in Amherst. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1888. 

Nash was married October 1, 1888, to Grace 
Lillian Owen of Amherst, Massachusetts. He has 
had four children: 

Henry Clark, 3rd, born April 7, 1889; 

Raymond Owen, born April 7, 1890; died April 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 35 

Willard Owen, born August 4, 1892; 
Clifford Roberts, born August 23, 1897. 
Address: Amherst, Massachusetts. 

WILLIAM KELLOGG NASH 

TEACHER 

Since graduation he has conducted the Mount 
Pleasant Institute, a school for boys. The school 
was moved to Hadley from Amherst July 1, 1902. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Nash was married April 4, 1899, to Grace Maud, 
daughter of John H. Lindsay of Amherst. He has 
one child: 

Geraldine Lindsay, born December 20, 1899. 

Address: Hadley, Massachusetts. 

HORATIO BANNISTER NEWELL 

MISSIONARY in japan 

He taught for a year and then studied in the 
Chicago Theological Seminary, from which he grad- 
uated in 1887. Since 1887 he has been a missionary 
in Japan. He was at the Amherst Commencement 
in 1897. 

Degrees: B.D., Chicago Theological Seminary, 
1887; M.A., Amherst, 1901. 

Publications : The Petroleum Industry of Naga- 
oka, Vol. XXIII; Transactions of the Asiatic Society 
of Japan: Tokio, 1895. Numerous newspaper and 
magazine articles and reports in English and Japa- 
nese. 

Newell was married July 3, 1889, to Jennie Cozad 
of Cleveland, Ohio. He has four children: 

Florence Cozad, born November 7, 1890; 

Justus Wellington, born August 31, 1893. 

Harriet, born December 4, 1894; 



36 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Horatio Whitman, born February 5, 1898 
Address: Niigata, Japan. 

CLARENCE LINCOLN NICHOLS 

PHYSICIAN 

He was a student at the Hahnemann Medical 
College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from 1883 to 
1885. With the exception of a short time spent in 
Walla-Walla, he has practiced in Portland, Oregon. 

Degree: M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, Phil- 
adelphia, Pennsylvania. 

Nichols was married June 23, 1898, to Mary 
Roseburg Banks of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. 

Address: 608 Dekum Block, Portland, Oregon. 

ALEXANDER DANA NOYES 

JOURNALIST 

He was engaged in newspaper and publishing 
work until June, 1891, when he became an editor on 
the staff of the New York Evening Post. In 1902 he 
was elected on the board of trustees of that paper. 
The same year he was appointed Lecturer on Finance 
at the New York University School of Commerce. 

Publications: Free Coinage Catechism, New 
York Evening Post, 1896; Thirty Years of American 
Finance: G. P. Putnam Sons, 1898;. Editorial articles 
on Finance for the Political Science Quarterly, Forum, 
Paris Marche Financier, and New York Financial 
Chronicle. Noyes is correspondent for the London 
Money Market Review and for the London Daily Mail. 

Degree: M.A (in course), Amherst. 

Address: Evening Post, New York City. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 37 

WILLIAM ORR 

TEACHER 

He has taught since graduation in Hadley, Hat- 
field and Springfield, Massachusetts. From 1894 to 
1900 he was vice-principal of the Springfield High 
School and head of the science department. In 1900 
he was elected principal of the High School. He has 
been, since 1895, curator of the Museum of Natural 
History. 

Publications : The Public School Library Muse- 
um: New England Magazine, 1898; The Opportunity 
of the Smaller Museums of Natural History : Popular 
Science Monthly, May, 1903. Articles for Journal of 
Education, Congregationalist, Springfield Republican, 
and Journal of School Geography. 

Degree: M.A. (for thesis submitted), Amherst, 
1892. 

Orr was married August 7, 1889, to Charlotte 
Evelyn Pettis of Springfield, Massachusetts. He has 
had four children: 

Alan Gardner, born July 15, 1890; 

Helen Theresa, born June 8, 1895; 

Philip Gardner, born March 12, 1897; died 
November 4, 1897; 

Charlotte Reid, born September 4, 1900; died 
May 17, 1901. 

Address: 30 Firglade Avenue, Springfield, Mass- 
achusetts. 

WILLIAM BARRY OWEN 

BUSINESS 

He studied in the Boston University School of 
Law from 1884 to 1886, and was admitted to the Suf- 
folk County bar in July, 1886. Until January 1, 1887, 
he studied patent law at Washington, D. C. For ten 



38 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

years he practiced law in Boston. In 1897 he became 
managing director of the Gramophone and Typewriter, 
Limited, London, England. Your secretary, in the 
summer of 1902, found Owen "in streaming London's 
central roar," prosperous and active in the manage- 
ment of a great business, with agencies extending 
around the world. 

Degree: LL.B., Boston University, 1886. 

He was married February 22, 1887, to May M. 
Robinson of Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts. He 
has two children: 

Paul, born October 27, 1891 

Knight, born April — , 1893 

Address: 21 City Road, Finb;ury Square, Lon- 
don, England. .s 

EDWARD SMITH PARSONS 

TEACHER 

After a term of study in the Columbia School of 
Political Science, and some months spent in business, 
he began a four-years' course in Yale Divinity School. 
He graduated in 1887 and then took a year of post- 
graduate work. From 1888 to 1892 he was pastor of 
the Congregational Church of Greeley, Colorado. In 
1892 he was elected Bemis Professor of English in 
Colorado College, and in 1898 vice-president of the 
same institution. He was acting president of the 
college during the absence of President Slocum from 
November 20, 1901, to August 1, 1902. He spent a 
year abroad in 1900. 

Degrees: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886; B.D., 
Yale Divinity School, 1887. 

Publications: Literature for Children: James and 
Mundy Company, Denver, Colorado; Milton: L'Alle- 
gro, II Penseroso, Comus and Lycidas: edited by 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 39 

E. S. P. and published by Benj. H. Sanborn & Co., 
Boston, 1900; The Earliest Life of Milton, in English 
Historical Review for January, 1901. 

Parsons was married December 4, 1889, to Mary 
Augusta Ingersoll of Cleveland, Ohio. He has had 
six children: 

Esther, born October 29, 1890; 

Charles Edwards, born February 29, 1892; 

Elizabeth Ingersoll, born September 8, 1894; 

Josephine, born May 23, 1897; died February 
16, 1899; 

Edward Smith, Jr., born July 13, 1898; 

Talcott, born December 13, 1902. 

Address : 1328 Nevada Avenue, Colorado Springs, 
Colorado. 

CORNELIUS HOWARD PATTON 

CLERGYMAN 

He studied at the Yale Divinity School from 
1883 to 1886. After supplying churches in Vermont 
and Washington, he became pastor of the Congrega- 
tional Church at Westfield, New Jersey, were he re- 
mained from 1887 to 1895. He was pastor of Pilgrim 
Church, Duluth, Minnesota, from 1895 to 1898. Sep- 
tember 18, 1898, he entered on the pastorate of the 
First Congregational Church of St. Louis, Missouri. 

Degrees: B.D., Yale Divinity School, May 20, 
1886; D.D., Amherst, 1899. 

Publications: Memorial Volume, "Honor Thy 
Father." Sermons and addresses. 

Patton was married June 5, 1889, to Pauline 
Whittlesey of Washington, D. C. He has two chil- 
dren: 

Augusta, born July 17, 1893; 

Catherine, born February 3, 1898. 

Address: 3707 Westminster Place, St. Louis, 
Missouri. 



4o 



RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 



WILLIAM LOCKWOOD PEET 

BUSINESS AND JOURNALISM 

He was engaged in business, mining and journal- 
ism on the Pacific Coast from 1883 to 1893. He 
then became editor and manager of The Contractor 
of San Francisco, California. The name of the paper 
was later changed to The Pacific Lumberman, Con- 
tractor and Electrician. No word has been received 
from him since 1893. 

Address: Trade Publishing Company, 10 Cali- 
fornia Street, San Francisco, California. 

BENJAMIN WHIPPLE PENNOCK 

CLERGYMAN 

He studied theology at Yale and Andover, and 
graduated from the latter school in 1886. He was 
pastor of churches in Massachusetts and New Hamp- 
shire from 1886 to April 1, 1894. He then became 
assistant librarian of the New Bedford Public Library, 
where he remained until January 1, 1902. Since May 
10, 1902, he has been pastor of the Congregational 
Church of Grafton, Vermont. 

Degree: B.D., Andover Theological Seminary, 
1886. 

Pennock was married September 1, 1886, to 
Minnie H. Smith of Amherst Massachusetts. He has 
two children: 

Grace Lavinia, born December 25, 1890; 

Helen L., born June 14, 1897. 

Address: Grafton, Vermont. 

CHARLES HENRY PRATT 
civil engineer 
From 1883 t° 1894 he was on the ranch of 
Wilkins Bros. & Co., Rio Pecos, Texas. Since 1894 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 41 

he has been in civil engineering in Massachusetts and 
Colorado. He is now in the employ of the Colorado 
Fuel and Iron Company. 

Pratt was married November 17, 1897, to Han- 
nah Smyth Jessemine of Buffalo, New York. He has 
one child: 

Stuart Wilkins, born January 13, 1899. 

Address: Fisher, Pueblo County, Colorado. 

ALEXANDER RAE 

PHYSICIAN 

In 1885 he graduated from the Long Island 
Medical College of Brooklyn, New York. After a 
year spent as house surgeon in the hospital of the 
college, he entered on the practice of medicine in 
Brooklyn, New York. He holds important positions 
in Long Island Medical College and Hospital, and in 
the service of the city of Brooklyn Health Depart- 
ment. 

Degree: M.D., Long Island Medical College, 1885. 

Address : 1 1 7 Henry Street, Brooklyn, New York. 

HENRY THOMAS RAINEY 

LAWYER 

He graduated from Union College of Law of 
Chicago, Illinois, in 1885, and was admitted to prac- 
tice in the State of Illinois in the same year. Since 
then he has practiced law in Carrollton, Illinois. 
Rainey is our first congressman. He was elected 
November 4, 1902, from the Twentieth Illinois dis- 
trict on the Democratic ticket with a plurality of 
5.276. 

Degrees: LL.B., Union College of Law, 1885; 
M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 



42 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Rainey was married June 27, 1888, to Ella Mc- 
Bride of Harvard, Nebraska. 

Address: Carrollton, Illinois. 

BENJAMIN RUSH RHEES 

TEACHER 

After a term of two years as Walker Instructor 
of Mathematics, he pursued a three-years' course at 
the Hartford Theological Seminary. On graduation 
he won a prize for the best essay on a missionary 
topic. He spent one year at Plainfield, New Jersey. 
After three years as pastor of the Middle Street 
Baptist Church of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, he 
became associate professor of New Testament Inter- 
pretation in Newton Theological Institution. From 
1894 to 1900 he was professor in same department. 
He was elected president of Rochester University 
July 6, 1899, and entered on his duties July 1, 1900. 

Degrees: B.D., Hartford, May, 1888; M.A. (for 
thesis submitted), Amherst, 1897; LL.D., Amherst, 
1900; D.D., Colgate, 1901. 

Publications: Saul's Experience as a Factor in 
his Theology : University of Chicago Press : The Life 
of Jesus of Nazareth: Scribner's, 1900. 

Rhees was married July 6, 1899, to Harriet 
Chapin, daughter of President and Mrs. L. Clark 
Seelye of Northampton, Massachusetts. He has one 
child: 

Morgan John, born June 15, 1900. 

Address: 440 University Avenue, Rochester, 
New York. 

CHARLES EDWARD ROUNDS 

STENOGRAPHER 

From 1883 to 1894, he was a stenographer in 
Fargo, Dakota, and in Minneapolis. Since 1894 he 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 



43 



has been stenographer for the Saint Anthony and 
Dakota Elevator Company of Minneapolis, Minne- 
sota. 

Rounds was married May 9, 1888, to Celia Laren 
Ellsworth of Minneapolis, Minnesota. He has three 
children : 

Louise Ellsworth, born February 20, 1889; 

Charles Knapp, born May 20, 1890; 

Julia Margaret, born April 4, 1893. 

Address: 122 Flour Exchange, Minneapolis, 
Minnesota. 

ARTHUR PRENTICE RUGG 

LAWYER 

He graduated from the Boston University Law 
School in 1886, with the honor of class orator. He 
was admitted to the Suffolk County bar in July, 
1886. Since 1886 he has practiced law in Worcester. 
He has held important positions in the Worcester 
city government. He has served two terms as Assist- 
ant District Attorney. Since July, 1897, he has been 
City Solicitor. 

Degree: LL.B., Boston University, June, 1886. 

Rugg was married April 10, 1889, to Florence 
May Belcher of Worcester, Massachusetts. He has 
had four children: 

Charles Belcher, born January 20, 1890; 

Arthur Prentice, Jr., born August 22, 1893; 

Esther Cynthia, born September 5, 1896; 

Donald Sterling, born August 18, 1898; died 
February 22, 1899. 

Address: 340 Main Street, Worcester, Massachu- 
setts. 



44 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

GEORGE RUGG 

TEACHER 

From 1883 to 1890 he taught in different schools 
in Delaware, Massachusetts and Vermont. In 1891 
he became principal of the High School at Grafton, 
Massachusetts, and remained there until 1900, when 
he was elected principal of the Chicopee, Massachu- 
setts, High School. He resigned this position in 
1902 and took up a course of study in education and 
economics in the graduate school of Harvard Uni- 
versity. Rugg has been chairman of the Headmasters 
Club of Western Massachusetts, and vice-president 
of the Hampden County Teachers Association. 

He was married July 20, 1887, to Grace Agnes 
Rogers of Brockton, Massachusetts, and has two 
children : 

Gertrude Rogers, born September 18, 1888; 

Charles Parks, born July 13, 1891. 

Address: 35 Arlington Street, Chicopee, Massa- 
chusetts. 

EDWARD EMERSON SABEN 

He was in business in Boston, Massachusetts, and 
St. Albans, Vermont, until 1894. Since 1894 he 
has been manager of an insurance agency in Boston, 
Massachusetts. He served on the Somerville City 
Council in 1899. 

Address: 32 Kilby Street, Boston, Massachusetts. 

OLIVER CHEEVER SEMPLE 

LAWYER 

He was principal of a grammar school in Lowell, 
Massachusetts, for two years and then studied law in 
Columbia for a year. He practiced law in Minne- 
apolis from 1886 to 1897, and then removed to New 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 45 

York City. March, 1902, Semple was appointed 
assistant counsel for the corporation of New York 
City. He is prominent in the political life of the 
city and did much to carry the district about Wash- 
ington Square for Jerome and Low, in 1901. 

Semple was married June 8, 1898, to Miss Hes- 
ter M. Callahan of New York. 

Address: 135 Broadway; 2 Tryon Row, New 
York City. 

HENRY AUGUSTUS SIMONDS 

SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS 

He taught in Missouri and Nebraska until 1888, 
when he became superintendent of schools at Allegan, 
Michigan. From 1890 to 1899 he was superintendent 
of schools at Stevens Point, Wisconsin. In 1899 
he was elected to a similar position in Oshkosh, Wis- 
consin. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Simonds was married June 18, 1884, to Elizabeth 
Goodnough of Green Bay, Wisconsin, and has had 
seven children: 

Albert Goodnough, born May 16, 1885; 

William Adams, born September 19, 1887; 

Alice Frances, born December 4, 1889; 

Elizabeth Sarah, born November 24, 1892; 

Esther, born March 23, 1895; 

John Marion, born July 8, 1898; 

Ruth, born January 22, 1901 ; died February 22, 
1901. 

Address: 63 Union Street, Oshkosh, Wisconsin. 

HENRY AUGUSTUS HAMMOND SMITH 

ARTIST 

In the year following graduation he worked as an 
engraver at Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts. Since 



46 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

then he has been engaged in art decoration and de- 
sign in New York City. From May, 1895, to May 
1896, he studied art in Europe. He has recently 
taken up the work of restoration of old paintings. 
Address: 29 Washington Square, New York City. 

ISAAC FINNEY SMITH 

TEACHER 

He taught in Poughkeepsie, New York, and in 
Arizona from 1S83 to 1886. Since then he has been 
a teacher in private schools in New York City. For 
the last four years he has, in addition to teaching, 
been a lecturer for the New York City Board of Edu- 
cation. His work in the latter line has been highly 
commended by leading authorities. He spent the 
summer of 1902 in study and travel in Europe. 

Degree: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886. 

Address: Provincetown, Massachusetts. 

OSGOOD SMITH 

LAWYER 

He taught in Princeton, Illinois, for two years, 
and then studied law in Portland, Maine, and at the 
Harvard Law School. He graduated from the law 
school in 1889. From 1889 to 1898 he practiced in 
New York City. May 2, 1898, he was appointed 
Second Lieutenant in Company L, Twelfth Regiment 
New York Infantry; was promoted to First Lieuten- 
ant of Company H in same regiment May 24, 1898, 
and was mustered out as captain in March, 1899. In 
1899 and 1900 he served under General Ludlow in 
Havana on several civil commissions. Since 1900 he 
has practiced law in Havana. 

Degrees: M.A. (in course), Amherst, 1886; LL.B., 
Harvard, 1889. 

Address: Mercaderes 4, Havana, Cuba. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 47 

WILLIAM BRADFORD SPROUT 

LAWYER 

After studying law for two years he was admitted 
to the bar in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1885. 
Until 1890 he practiced in Worcester. Since 1890 
he has been in Boston. He was for a time attorney 
for the West End Street Railway. He was a member 
of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 
1889 and 1890. 

Sprout was married in May, 1885, to Nellie L. 
Fisk of Sterling, Illinois. Mrs. Sprout died July 17, 
1892. He was married June 28, 1899, to Margaret 
Lander, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Perkins 
Bigelow of Natick, Massachusetts. Sprout has had 
two children : 

Ethelwyn C, born January 30, 1889; died Feb- 
ruary 22, 1895 ; 

William Bradford, Jr., born April 4, 1900. 

Address: 30 Court Street, Boston, Massachusetts. 

FRED WILLIAM STICKNEY 

CLERK 

From 1883 to 1891 he was in business at Grove- 
land, Massachusetts, and at Fond-du-lac, Wisconsin! 
In 1898 he was private secretary for Roger Wolcott, 
with office in Exchange Building, Boston, Massachu- 
setts. 

Address: West Newbury, Massachusetts. 

WILLIAM Z. STUART 

BUSINESS 

He was in business in Neenah, Wisconsin, from 
1883 to 1 90 1. May 6, 1901, he removed to Chicago 
as manager of General Paper Company. 



48 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Stuart was married December 25, 1889, to Helen 
Cheney Kimberley of Neenah, Wisconsin. He has 
had two children: 

His first child was born January 1, 1893, and 
died the same day. 

Kimberley Stuart, born May 19, 1895. 

Address: The Virginia, Chicago, Illinois. 

GEORGE MASON TROWBRIDGE 

JOURNALIST 

He studied for two years at the Union College 
of Law, Chicago, Illinois. He practiced in Chicago 
from 1885 to 1893. In 1899 and 1900 he was secre- 
tary to the mayor of Los Angeles, and on the editorial 
staff of the Los Angeles Herald. June, 1901, he was 
reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle, and in 
December of the same year on the staff of the San 
Francisco Evening Bulletin. He was director and 
librarian of the San Francisco Press Club. January, 
1902, Trowbridge entered the service of the Oregon 
Journal of Portland, Oregon. 

Degree: LL.B., Chicago Law School, 1885. 

Address: Oregon Journal, Portland, Oregon. 

CHARLES AUGUSTUS TUTTLE 

TEACHER 

He taught in Ware for two years and then studied 
International Law and Political Economy in Heidel- 
berg, Germany. From 1886 to 1893 he was teacher 
in the department of political economy in Amherst 
College. Since 1893, he has been Professor of Politi- 
cal Economy and Political Science in Wabash College, 
Crawfordsville, Indiana. 

Degrees: M.A. (in course), Amherst; Ph.D., Hei- 
delberg, 1886. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 



49 



Publications: The Wealth Concept: Annals of 
American Academy of Political and Social Science, 
April, 1 891; Outline of Course in Economic Theory: 
100 pp., Crawfordsville, Indiana, 1894; The Funda- 
mental Economic Principle: Quarterly Journal of 
Economics, Harvard, February, 1901 ; The Workman's 
Position in the Light of Economic Progress : Publica- 
tions of American Economic Association, February, 
1902. 

Tuttle was married January 6, 189 1, to Affa 
Sophia Miner of Ware, Massachusetts. He has two 
children : 

Miner Worthington, born March 31, 1893; 

Elizabeth Mary Affa, born December 11, 1898. 

Address: 606 West Wabash Avenue, Crawfords- 
ville, Indiana. 

GEORGE ALBERT TUTTLE 

He studied medicine for a year with Dr. L. M. 
Tuttle of Holyoke, and then pursued a course of two 
years at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 
New York City, He was in hospital practice from 
1886 to 1888. Since 1888 he has practiced in New 
York City. He holds important hospital appoint- 
ments. 

Degree: M.D., College of Physicians and Sur- 
geons, New York City, May 13, 1886. 

Address: 237 West Forty-fourth Street, New 
York City. 

WILLISTON WALKER 

TEACHER 

After graduating from the Hartford Theological 
Seminary in 1886, he took a two-years' course of 
study at the University of Leipsic. He taught history 



5° 



RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 



for a year at Bryn Mawr. From 1889 to 1901 he was 
professor of history in the Hartford Theological Sem- 
inary. Since 1901 he has been Titus Stout Professor 
of Ecclesiastical History in Yale University. Walker 
won the Hartranft prize for the best essay on a mis- 
sionary topic, on his graduation from Hartford 
Theological Seminary. 

Degrees: B.D., Hartford Theological Seminary, 
May 13, 1886; Ph.D., Leipsic, 1888; D.D., Western 
Reserve University, 1894, Amherst, 1895, Yale Uni- 
versity, 1901. 

Publications: "Heads of Ageement" and Union of 
Congregationalists and Presbyterians, based on them 
in London, 1691; The Influence of the Mathers in 
the Religious Development of New England. (These 
papers were published by the American Society of 
Church History.) Creeds and Platforms of Congrega- 
tionalism: pp. viii, 604: Charles Scribner's Sons, New 
York, 1893. A History of Congregational Churches 
in the United States: pp. xiii, 451: Christian Liter- 
ature Company, 1894. The Validity of Congregational 
Ordination: pp. 37: Hartford, 1898. History of the 
Reformation: Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 
1900. Ten New England Leaders: Silver, Burdett 
& Co., 1901. 

Walker was married June 1, 1886, to Alice 
Mather of Amherst, Massachusetts. He has two 
children : 

Aurelia, born August 9, 1894; 

Elizabeth, born August 2, 1902. 

Address: 281 Edwards Street, New Haven, Con- 
necticut. 

CLARENCE EUGENE WARD 

BUSINESS 

He has resided at Riverton, Connecticut, since 
graduation. In 1892 and 1893 he studied law at 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 5 I 

Albany. In 1887 he was candidate for representa- 
tive to Connecticut legislature. He is now in the 
lumber business. 

Address: Riverton, Connecticut. 

FRANK DALE WARREN 

BUSINESS 

From 1883 to 1887 he was with the Fairchild 
Paper Company of Boston and Pepperell. Since 1887 
he has been in the paper business in New York City. 

Warren was married June 19, 1889, to Louise 
Taft of Uxbridge, Massachusetts. He has two chil- 
dren: 

Frank Dale, Jr., born July 9, 1897; 

Mary, born September 6, 1899. 

He resides in Fanwood, New Jersey. 

Address: 280 Broadway, New York City. 

CHARLES HENRY WASHBURN 

CLERGYMAN 

After a few months of theological study at An- 
dover, he entered on church work in and about Bos- 
ton. From October, 1890, to 1898, he was pastor of 
the Congregational Church of Falmouth, Massachu- 
setts. From 1898 to 1899 he was associate pastor of 
Berkeley Temple, Boston. Since October 19, 1899, 
he has been pastor of the Union Church of Maynard, 
Massachusetts. 

Washburn was married April 22, 1886, to Louise 
Wentworth Chaffin of Boston, Massachusetts. He has 
five children: 

Ruth Emery, born March 25, 1887; 

Almy Dwight, born November 1, 1888; 

Ralph Seelye, born August 25, 1890; 

Lawrence Gould, born February 23, 1893; 



52 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Walter Bailey Chaffin, born April -, 1897. 
Address: Maynard, Massachusetts. 



ELBRIDGE JOHN WHITAKER 

LAWYER 

He taught for nine years at Wrentham, and 
then studied law for two years. He was admitted to 
the bar in July, 1894. Since then he has practiced in 
Boston. He was representative from Wrentham in 
1895 and 1898. He was chairman of School Com- 
mittee in 1902. He is now solicitor for the town. 

Whitaker was married December 13, 1898, to 
Anna M. C, daughter of Jacob and Barbara Weber. 
He has one child: 

Richard E., born August 25, 1900. 

Address: Wrentham, Massachusetts. 

Business Address: 27 Tremont Row, Boston, 
Massachusetts. 

CHARLES TRISTRAM CHASE WHITCOMB 

TEACHER 

He taught in Sandwich and Wakefield until 
1895, when he became headmaster of the English 
High School of Somerville, Massachusetts. 

Degree: M.A., Amherst, 1886. 

Whitcomb was married July 10, 1889, to Char- 
lotte Chapouile Waterman of New York City. He 
has two children: 

Rachel Gray, born June 3, 1891; 

John Leonard, born September 4, 1894. 

Address: 44 Walnut Street, Somerville, Massa- 
chusetts. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 53 

CHARLES TERRILL WHITTLESEY 

TEACHER 

After teaching for a year in New Marlboro, Mass- 
achusetts, he studied at the Yale Divinity School 
from 1885 to 1884. From 1887 to 1898 he was engaged 
in church work in North Dakota, Oregon and Wash- 
ington. Since 1898 he has taught in Oregon. He is 
now professor of Greek and Latin in Dallas College, 
Dallas, Oregon. 

Degree: B.D., Yale Divinity School, May 19, 
1887. 

Whittlesey was married May 27, 1890, to Pene- 
lope R. Skinner of Rockford, Illinois. He has four 
children : 

Ludella Miriam, born April 24, 1891; 

Ralph Edward, born June 6, 1895; 

Roland Deming, born March 18, 1898; 

Raymond Charles, born September 27, 1902. 

Address: Dallas College, Dallas, Oregon. 



Supplementary Record 



WILLIAM CUTLER ATWATER 

BUSINESS 

He left college at end of Freshman year, 
but returned and graduated with class of 1884. He 
was in the coal business in New York City, Boston 
and Fall River, Massachusetts, from 1884 to 1900. 
Since 1900 he has been in the wholesale coal business 
in New York City. 

Atwater was married May 1, 1889, to Ida W. 
Hay of Easton, Pennsylvania, and has four children : 

William C, Jr., born July 18, 1890; 

John Jacob, born May 22, 1893; 

Margaret Hay, born September 11, 1894; 

David Hay, born November 9, 1898. 

Business address: 1 Broadway, New York City. 

Home: 248 Hancock Street, Brooklyn, New 
York. 

CONRAD MYRON BARDWELL 

SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS 

He left college at end of Sophomore year. He 
taught in Haydenville, Massachusetts, and in Illinois, 
from 1 88 1 to 1886. He was for four years superin- 
tendent of schools at Tipton, Iowa, and held the 
same position in Canton, Illinois, for six years. Since 
1896 he has been in charge of the schools of Aurora, 
Illinois. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 55 

Bard well was married June 17, 1886, to Annie 
Louise Woleben of Marengo, Illinois. He has four 
children : 

Robert Cousins, born January 1, 1888; 

Richard Woleben, born May 14, 1889; 

Anna Laura, born October 4, 1893; 

Conrad M., Jr., born November 1, 1896. 

Address: 60 South Lincoln Avenue, Aurora, 
Illinois. 

EVERETT NEXSEN BLANKE 
ADVERTISING agent 

He left college in Sophomore year. He was in 
business in Chicago, Illinois, for a short time, and 
then engaged in journalism in Chicago and New 
York. He was employed on the New York Herald, 
the Brooklyn Eagle, and the Evening Post. He then 
was connected with L. B. Browne's Advertising 
Agency. He is now with the Lawyers Advertising 
Company of New York. 

Blanke was married December 15, 1897, to Har- 
riet Isabel Cutler of Brooklyn, New York. He has 
one child, Donald, four and one-half years old. 

Address: The Lawyers Advertising Agency, The 
Tribune Building, New York City. 

THOMAS COCHRAN ] 

TEACHER 

He left Amherst at the close of Junior year. He 
taught in Brooklyn until 1888, and then entered the 
drug business. He remained in this occupation until 
after 1893. He is now teaching in the Polytechnic 
Institute of Brooklyn, New York. 

Cochran was married February 23, 1893, to 



56 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Emma Belle Hendrickson of Chicago, Illinois. Mrs. 
Cochran died August 27, 1896. 

He was married June 29, 1898, to Ethel Childs 
of Bennington, Vermont. 

Address: 171 Schermerhorn Street, Brooklyn, 
New York. 

(From Classbook of 1898.) 

GEORGE WILSON FOSTER 

He left college at the close of Sophomore year. 
No information as to his occupation or whereabouts 
has been received. 

CHARLES EDWIN FRENCH 

He left college at close of Freshman year. No 
reply has been received from him. He studied chem- 
istry for a year after leaving Amherst, and then 
engaged in business in Cleveland, Ohio. 

He was married November 12, 1885, to Mary 
Nevins of Cleveland, Ohio. 

FRANK JUDSON GOODWIN 

CLERGYMAN 

He left Amherst during Freshman year, but 
returned the following year and graduated with the 
class of 1884. From 1884 to 1888 he studied at the 
Union Theological Seminary, New York City. He 
was for eleven years pastor of the Congregational 
Church at Glen Ridge, New Jersey. In April, 1899, 
he was installed pastor of the Pawtucket Congrega- 
tional Church, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. 

Degree: B.D., Union Theological Seminary, New 
York City, 1888. 

Publication: Harmony of the Life of Saint Paul: 
American Tract Society, New York. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 



57 



Goodwin was married November n, 1891, to 
Grace Haywood Duffield of Bloomfield, New Jersey. 
He has one child: 

Mary Duffield, born March 11, 1899. 

Address: 16 Maynard Street, Pawtucket, Rhode 
Island. 

EDWARD BARTON HERRICK 

PHYSICIAN 

He left Amherst at the close of Freshman year 
to take up the study of medicine. He graduated 
from the medical school of the University of New 
York City. After a year of post-graduate study he 
entered on the practice of medicine. He has followed 
his profession in and about New York City, in Kansas 
and Arizona and on the Pacific Coast. In 1898 he 
was traveling for his health in the South, and was 
afterward at Lynn, Massachusetts. 

Degree: M.D., University of City of New York, 
March, 1884. 

Herrick was married November 25, 1883, to 
Emma Church Farwell of Boston, Massachusetts. 

Address: Care of Mrs. W. D. Herrick, Amherst, 
Massachusetts. 

(No word has been received from him since 1898.) 

TING LIANG HO 

PHYSICIAN 

He left college at the end of Sophomore year by 
the reason of the recall of Chinese students by the 
government. In 1886 he was reported as a surgeon 
on a Chinese war vessel. He served during the war 
with France and suffered greatly from the exposure 
and strain, so that for some years his health was in 
a very critical condition. Later reports say that his 



58 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

health is much improved. He is said to be living 
near Canton. 

(This information was given by Mrs. Alexander 
McClean of Springfield, Massachusetts, with whom he 
made his home during a part of his stay in the United 
States.) 

FRANK TUCKER HOPKINS 

PHYSICIAN 

He left college at the close of Freshman year 
and entered on the study of medicine at the College 
of Physicians and Surgeons. He graduated in 1885, 
and after three years of hospital experience he en- 
tered on the practice of medicine in Fishkill-on- 
Hudson. In 1895 an d 1896 he studied in Berlin and 
Dresden. Since 1896 he has practiced in New York 
City. 

Degree: M.D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, 
1885. 

Hopkins was married August 20, 1901, at Got- 
tingen, Germany, to Emily Linnard Neilson. 

Address : 200 West 1 13th Street, New York City. 

GEORGE FRANK JEWETT 

TEACHER 

He left Amherst at the close of Freshman year. 
After four years of teaching he entered Harvard 
College in 1884 and graduated in 1886. He taught 
in high schools in Massachusetts, Connecticut and 
New Jersey. In 1 89 1 he was elected headmaster of the 
Ray en School, Youngstown, Ohio. He remained in 
the position until 1902, when he became principal of 
the Mount Ida School for Girls, Newton, Massachu- 
setts. 

Jewett was married June 8, 1882, to Abigail B. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 



59 



Fay of Freeport, Ohio. He has had three children: 

Eddie, born May 20, 1883; died July 3, 1883; 

Edith, born May 20, 1883; 

Helen, born November 7, 1889. 

Address: 115 Bellevue Street, Newton, Massa- 
chusetts. 

ELIAS BLISS JONES 

BUSINESS 

He left Amherst at the close of Freshman year. 
After thirteen years' exerience in banking in Norwich, 
Connecticut, and Boston, he became general agent 
for the Atlas Guarantee Company of Boston, Massa- 
chusetts. This position he held from 1893 to 1894. 
From 1894 to July 1, 1901, he was a member of the 
firm of Williams & Jones, insurance agents. Since 
1 90 1 he has been in the firm of Wheeler & Jones, 
note brokers, Boston, Massachusetts. 

Jones was married January 23, 1887, to Belle 
Blodgett of Newtonville, Massachusetts. He has had 
five children: 

Gurdon Blodgett, born May 20, 1888; 

Alister Ross, born January 9, 1890; 

Alden Bliss, born September 3, 1891; 

Pauline Fales, born June 7, 1893; died July 
29, 1896; 

Miriam M., born April 29, 1895. 

Address: 2 Kilby Street, Boston, Massachusetts. 

Residence: Newtonville, Massachusetts. 

NATHANIEL HARRIS KIRBY 

PHYSICIAN 

He left Amherst at the close of Sophomore year. 
He studied medicine and received the degree of M.D. 
Until 1893 he practiced in New York, Michigan, and 



60 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

in Concord, Massachusetts. From 1898 to 1901 he 
was in Denver, Colorado, and was lecturing on dis- 
eases of the skin in the Medical School of Denver 
University. The health of Mrs. Kirby compelled him 
to leave Denver in September, 1901. He has since 
then practiced in Milford, Massachusetts, Boston, 
and Hartford, Connecticut. 

Kirby was married June 19, 1895, to Rebecca 
Billings Johnson. Mrs. Kirby died December 27, 
1 90 1, in Concord, Massachusetts. 

Address: Walnut Lodge Hospital, Hartford, 
Connecticut . 

WILLIAM DWIGHT KIRBY 

BUSINESS 

He left Amherst at the close of Sophomore year. 
Since then he has been engaged in banking, flour 
manufacture, and has been a bookkeeper in Concord, 
Massachusetts, and Nichols, New York. He is now 
in Lestershire, New York. 

Kirby was married June 3, 1890, to Eunice 
Dunham of Nichols, New York. He has one child: 

Barbara, born April 30, 1891. 

Address: Lestershire, New York. 

WILLIAM C KITCHIN 

BUSINESS 

He left Amherst at close of winter term, Fresh- 
man year, and entered Syracuse University, from 
which he graduated in 1882. Until 1888 he was a 
missionary in Japan. From 1888 to 1891 he studied 
and taught in Boston, Massachusetts. From 1891 to 
1900 he was a professor in the University of Vermont, 
Burlington, Vermont. In April, 1903, he was general 
agent for the Connecticut General Life Insurance 
Company. 



RECORD OP TWENTY YEARS 6l 

Degrees: A.B., Syracuse University, 1882; M.A., 
Syracuse University; Ph.D., Syracuse University. 

Publications : History of the English Language; 
Masterpieces of English Prose, 4 vols.: Methodist 
Mission Press, Tokio, Japan. The Story of Sodom; 
Truth as Strange as Fiction: Hunt & Easton, New- 
York. 

Kitchin was married June 23, 1882, to Fanny Car- 
lotta Furbeck of Collamer, New York. He has four 
children : 

Edith Carlotta, born July 28, 1883; 

Esmond Furbeck, born July 29, 1884; 

Howard William, born February 7, 1887; 

Bernard Lee, born June 27, 1891. 

Address: Gazette Building, 334 State Street, 
Schenectady, New York. 

HOHANNES KRIKORIAN 

JOURNALIST 

He left Amherst in 1881, and entered on a two- 
years' course of study at Yale Divinity School. From 
1883 to 1902 he was a teacher in the Central Turkey 
College, Aintab, Turkey-in-Asia. He took a post- 
graduate course in theology and psychology at Yale 
in 1898. He is now the editor of The Avedaper, a 
weekly Armeno-Turkish paper published in Constan- 
tinople. He preaches in the chapel of the Bible 
House. He was ordained an evangelist in the Central 
Turkey Mission at Aintab, July 9, 1902. 

Degree: B.D., Yale Divinity School, 1883. 

Publication: A Catechism in the Turkish Lan- 
guage: Constantinople, 1897. 

Kirkorian was married September 5, 1888, to 
Rebecca Aristides Momjiades. He has had five chil- 
dren: 



62 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Ephronia Loucia (girl), born August 23, 1889 
TerouantMovses (boy), born January 20, 1892 
Vahran Rodolph (boy), born October 25, 1895 
Pyzant Socrates (boy), born March 19, 1898 
died October 19, 1899; 

Albert, born October 1, 1900. 

Address: Bible House, Constantinople, Turkey. 

WILLIAM HARTFORD LEONARD 

LAWYER 

He left Amherst at the close of Junior year. 
From 1882 to 1884 he studied at the Boston Univer- 
sity Law School. Since 1884 he has practiced law in 
Boston. 

Degree: LL.B., Boston University, 1884. 

Leonard was married May 5, 1886, to Charlotte 
A. Richardson of Taunton, Massachusetts. He has 
had five children: 

Perl Richardson, born April 11, 1887; 

Hartford, born July 23, 1888; 

Curtis Woodbury, born November 22, 1891; 

Charlotte A., born November 22, 1893; died 
December 13, 1896; 

Dorothy, born January 22, 1896. 

Address: 25 Equitable Building, Boston, Mass- 
achusetts. 

SARKIS LEVONIAN 

TEACHER 

He left Amherst in 1881, and for two years 
studied mathematics and civil engineering in Shef- 
field Scientific School. Since 1883 he has been pro- 
fessor of mathematics and natural Science in Central 
Turkey College, Aintab. He studied zoology in the 
University of Basel, Switzerland, from April, 1897, 
to February, 1898. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 63 

Degree: Ph.B., Sheffield Scientific School, 1883. 

Publications : Text-book in Arithmetic and Trig- 
onmetry for use of Students in College ; Life of Christ 
for use in Preparatory Schools, 1897. 

Levonian was married August 20, 1884, to Jo- 
hanna Wilhelmina Rosalia Manissadjian of Amasia, 
Turkey-in-Asia. He has three children: 

Julia Catherine, born July 12, 1885; 

Mari Hargoohi, born August 20, 1888; 

Bysant Asadoor, born December 13, 1890. 

Address: Central Turkey College, Aintab, Tur- 
key-in-Asia. 

FREDERICK BRAINERD MITCHELL 

BUSINESS 

He left Amherst at the close of Freshman year. 
From 1880 to 1889, with the exception of a year, 
1884-1885, spent in the Yale Law School, he taught 
in high schools in Connecticut. From 1889 to 1891 
he was in the insurance business in New Britain, 
Connecticut. He practiced law for a year in New 
Britain. He was then for a time agent for the Hare 
Railroad Signal Company of New York City. In 1902 
he was reported to be a traveling salesman for the 
Charles A. Parker Company of Meriden, Connecticut. 

Degree: LL.B., Yale Law School, 1885. 

Mitchell was married December 25, 1885, to 
Harriet Allyn Houston of Thompson ville, Connecticut. 
He has one child: 

John Houston, born August 29, 1890. 

Address: Care of Charles A. Parker, Meriden, 
Connecticut, or care of Charles Mitchell, Esq., Times 
Building, New York City. 

(No letters have been received from Mitchell 
since 1893.) 



64 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

HENRY ADAMS NORTON 

BUSINESS 

He left Amherst at the close of Freshman year. 
From 1880 to 1890 he was in railroad, telegraph and 
telephone business in New York and on Cape Cod. 
For two years, 1891-1893, he studied at Hamilton, 
New York. Since then he has been engaged in 
various occupations. He is now employed at the 
Crompton-Knowles Loom Works, Worcester, Mass- 
achusetts. 

Norton was married June 15, 1881, to Millie 
Norris Bacon of Worcester, Massachusetts. He has 
had four children: 

Richard Allen, born October 3, 1882; 

Henry Edward Adams, born September 28, 
1884; 

James Arthur, born July 27, 1886; 

Edward Bacon, born August 8, 1887; died 
August 9, 1888. 

Address: 52 Hollywood Street, Worcester, Mass- 
achusetts. 

EDWARD STEVENS ORR 

BUSINESS 

He left college at the end of Freshman year. He 
was m business in St. Louis and Charleston, Illi- 
nois, from 1881 to 1890. From 1890 to 1893 he was 
vice-president of the William A. Orr Shoe Company 
of St. Louis, Missouri. Since 1893 he has been 
president of the Orr & Lindsay Shoe Company of 
St. Louis. In February, 1902, he was compelled 
by serious illness to give up active work, but was 
hoping to resume business by January 1 of this year. 

Orr was married June 4, 1889, to Mary Agnes 
Orr of St. Louis, Missouri. He has two children: 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 65 

Edward Burr, born May 19, 1894; 
Katherine, born August 19, 1900. 
Address: 3223 Lafayette Avenue, St. Louis, 
Missouri. 

ALBERT RIPLEY PALMER 

BUSINESS 

He left Amherst at the close of Sophomore year. 
He has been in the carpet business since he left college ; 
from 1 88 1 to 1885, in Amherst, and then in Chicago, 
with Marshall Field & Co. In 1898 he was appointed 
assistant manager in the carpet department of that 
firm. 

Address: Care Marshall Field & Co., State and 
Washington Streets, Chicago, Illinois. 

FRANCIS WRIGHT PERRY 

BUSINESS 

He left Amherst at close of Freshman year. He 
taught music until 1899. Since then he has been 
engaged in market gardening near Lexington, Massa- 
chusetts, and in Florida. 

He was married September 27, 1882, to Georgi- 
ana Woolson of Chicopee, Massachusetts. Mrs. Perry 
died November 29, 1885, at Sioux Falls, South Dakota. 

Perry was married in 1894 to Thora E. Peterson 
of Crescent Cottage, Revere Beach, Revere, Massa- 
chusetts. 

Address: Alva, Florida. 

CLAYTON DAVID SMITH 

LAWYER 

He left Amherst at the close of Junior year. 
After a year spent at Huntington Massachusetts, 



66 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

he studied law and was admitted to the bar in June, 
1884. Since then he has practiced law in Chester, 
Massachusetts. 

Smith was married October 10, 1888, to Edith 
M. Rude of Huntington, Massachusetts. He has two 
children : 

Helen E., born March 31, 1892; 

Dorcas, born August 24, 1899. 

Address: Chester, Massachusetts. 

LEVI SMITH, Jr. 

MINING 

He left college at close of Sophomore year, and 
engaged in mining in Nevada. No word has been 
received from him since 1888. 

Address: Belleville, Esmeralda County, Nevada. 

JOHN BALDWIN WALKER 

PHYSICIAN 

He left Amherst at the close of Sophomore year. 
He studied at Harvard College and Medical School. 
From 1887 to 1888 he was in hospital practice in 
Boston, and then studied for two years abroad. He 
practiced for two years in Cleveland, Ohio. Since 
1892 he has followed his profession in New York City. 
He is surgeon in several hospitals and instructor in 
College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City. 
He is president of the surgical section of the New 
York Academy of Sciences. He has published sev- 
eral monographs on surgical topics. 

Degrees: A.B., Harvard, 1884; M.D., Harvard, 
1887. 

Address: 33 East Thirty-third Street, New York 
City. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 67 

JOSEPH WHEELWRIGHT 

CLERGYMAN 

He left Amherst in February, 1883, because of 
illness. Until 1891 he was engaged in farming at South 
Byfield, Massachusetts. He then studied for two 
years at Andover Theological Seminary. From 1893 
to 1897 he was in pastoral work in churches in the 
eastern part of Massachusetts. From August 25, 
1897, to October, 1899, he was pastor of the Congre- 
gational Church at Hebron, Hew Hampshire. He was 
in Greenfield, Massachusetts, in October, 1899. Jan- 
uary 1, 1902, he became pastor of the Congregational 
Church at Prescott, Massachusetts. 

Wheelwright was married January 22, 1884, to 
Alice R. Upton of Salem, Massachusetts. He has 
one child : 

Grace Adams, born April 3, 1885. 

Address: Prescott, Massachusetts. 

GURDON WALTER WILLIAMS 

LAWYER 

He left Amherst in the spring of 1881. From 
1 88 1 to 1885 he studied law in Boston University and 
in the office of N. S. Williams, Pittsburg, Pennsyl- 
vania. He was admitted to the Alleghany County 
bar in January, 1885. He has practiced in Pittsburg 
since 1885, and is a member of the firm of N. S. & G. 
W. Williams. 

Address: 423 Diamond Street, Pittsburg, Penn- 
sylvania. 



m jJWemimam 



GRADUATES 

William Claflin, born March 26, 1862, at Marl- 
boro, Mass.; died January 10, 1902, at Lombard. 
111. 

George P. Ellison, born April 6, 1859, at East Creek, 
Herkimer County, N. Y. ; died May 7, 1888, at 
Utica, N. Y. 

John Mackie Johnson, born December 6, 1859, at 
Norwich, Conn.; died October 24, 1898, at Nor- 
wich, Conn. 

Marcus Marvin Mason, born October 7, 1861, at 
Winchendon, Mass.; died Julv 22, 1892, at Niag- 
ara Falls, N. Y. 

Scott Smith Silliman, born January 15, 1855, at 
Stamford, N. Y. ; died May 27, 1884, at Kingston, 
N. Y. 

Henry Dows Stebbins, born September 10, i860, 
at Cazenovia, N. Y.; died April 23, 1899, at 
Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y. 

NON-GRADUATES 

James White Allen, born October 1, i860, at Wor- 
cester, Mass. ; died October 26, 1897, at Worcester, 
Mass. 

Walter Pierce Hendrickson, born October 7, 1861, 
at New Bedford, Mass.; died November 13, 1892, 
at Pasadena, Cal. 

Hugh McKee Jones, died October 2, 1881, at Har- 
rodsburg, Ky. 

Frank Howard Oliver, born December 23, i860, 
at Charlestown, Mass.; died April 21, 1902, at 
Everett, Mass. 

Harry Irving Reed, born June 20, i860, at East 
Weymouth, Mass.; died November 29, 1883, at 
East Weymouth, Mass. 



Obituary Notices 



WILLIAM CLAFLIN 

The son of James F. and Caroline (Poole) Claflin 
was born March 26, 1862, at Marlboro, Ma s. He was 
fitted for college at the Chicago High School. After 
graduation from Amherst, he at once took up the 
study of law, and in January, 1884, entered the law 
office of S. W. Packard of Chicago. In November, 
1884, he left this office and entered that of Bryan & 
Hatch, 95 Washington Street, Chicago. He taught in 
the Chicago evening schools during the winter of 
1884 and 1885. From June to August, 1885, he spent 
in Las Vegas, New Mexico, for the benefit of his 
health. He was sales agent for mining machinery 
from August to October, 1885, and in this work trav- 
elled through Colorado and New Mexico. He then took 
charge of a concentrating plant at Cerrillos, New Mex- 
ico and later of the smelter yard of the Graphic Min- 
ing and Smelting Company at Socorro, New Mexico. 

June 1, 1886, he become a partner with his uncle, 
Isaac Claflin, in the real estate business at 154 Lake 
Street, Chicago. In 1898, the firm's name had be- 
come William Claflin & Co. He studied for a year in 
the Kent College of Law. He continued in the real 
estate business until the time of his death. He re- 
sided in Lombard, 111., and was for several terms an 
alderman of that city. 

Claflin was married October 14, 1886, to Grace, 



7 o 



RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 



daughter of Stephen R. and Annie F. Thurston, of 
Lombard, 111. 

Claflin died January 10, 1902, after an illness of 
five days from pneumonia. His widow survives him 
with two sons: Stephen Thurston Claflin, born July 
23, 1893, and Edward Cahoon Claflin, born Novem- 
ber 2, 1897. 

Claflin had come to hold a prominent place in 
business and in the public life of the city where he 
resided. He was active in the organizations of the 
Amherst Alumni in Chicago, and these societies gave 
expression to their estimate of his character and their 
loss in his death in the following tributes : 

From Chicago Graduate Chapter of Alpha Delta 
Phi: 

William Claflin possessed in a rare degree the 
qualities of heart and mind which make a true and 
valued friend, having the happy faculty of making 
friends. This was especially the case in the commu- 
nity where he lived, being the leader in all plans for 
advancement and progress, whether physical, mental 
or moral, in village, school and church. 

Being pre-eminently a manly man, strong, ener- 
getic, forceful; able to cope with and overcome obsta- 
cles, he attracted by the magnetism of his winning 
personality, young and old alike. 

To all interests with which he was associated, he 
gave freely of his strength of mind and heart, broad- 
ened by wide business experience and sound judg- 
ment. 

His unexpected death in the prime of his man- 
hood leaves a gap in the ranks which can not be filled, 
and a memory in the loving hearts of all who knew 
him, this will ever be his most enduring monument. 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 7 I 

From the Memorial of the Amherst Club of Chi- 
cago: 

William Claflin was one of the original members 
of the Amherst Club at Chicago, and always inter- 
ested in everything that advanced the interest of the 
College or Club. 

This spirit was his by right of inheritance from 
his father, whose love for his old College was a potent 
factor in the son's education. 

His sudden death at his home in Lombard, 111., 
on Friday, January 10, 1902, after so brief an illness, 
came as a painful shock to the members of the Club, 
and his large circle of friends throughout the College. 
He was our friend — to know him however slightly was 
to feel the genial nature which attracted, and the 
unfailing response was a desire for better acquaintance 
which ripened into friendship and esteem. 

He was possessed of an abounding optimism, not 
the kind that blinds the eyes to difficulties, but the 
optimism which gives strength to conquer, and whose 
end is well-earned success. 

His position and influence in the community in 
.which he lived is amply testified by the many offices 
of responsibility and trust, which his fellow townsmen 
conferred upon him. 

His life stood for strength, activity, manhood; 
a typical citizen of the wonderful city in which his 
business life was passed, best illustrated by its terse 
motto, "I will." Yet he found time to learn the 
beauty of the higher Altruistic Life, and was ever 
ready to extend a helping hand freely and generously 
to those about him. 

(Signed) Frederick S. Fales, '96, 
S. Tenny French, '72, 
Paul Blatchford, '82, 

Committee. 



72 RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

FRANK HOWARD OLIVER 

The son of Robert E. and Emily F. Oliver was 
born December 23, i860, at Charlestown, Mass. 
When he was fifteen years of age, his parents re- 
moved to Somerville, Mass., where he attended the 
Grammar and High School. He graduated from both 
with honor. He was obliged to leave Amherst at the 
close of Freshman year by reason of the illness of his 
mother. In October, 1880, he became shipping clerk 
with a firm engaged in the wholesale knitting business. 
In 1885 he removed to Everett. March 1, 1887, he 
entered the service of the National Express Company 
in Boston as a stenographer. He was married March 

9, 1887, to Anna Elizabeth, daughter of Ephriam 
and Elizabeth A. Brown, of Shelburne, Nova Scotia. 
He became a member of the Belmont Methodist 
Episcopal church of Maiden and was active in its 
work until his failing health compelled him to give 
up these duties. March 9, 1888, he became stenog- 
rapher for the United States Express Company, of 
175 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass. Here he re- 
mained until January 26, 1889, when he was appointed 
chief stenographer for C. H. Graves & Sons, No. 35 
Hawkins Street, Boston, Mass. This position he held 
until the time of his death. He was also stenographic 
reporter for the Everett Free Press. He had three 
children : 

Robert Nelson, born February 7, 1888; 
Florence May, born April 8, 1889; died August 

10, 1889. 

Francis Batchelder, born January 6, 1896. 
Oliver died April 21, 1902, at Everett, Massa- 
chusetts. 



Class Statistics 



NUMBER 

At Graduation . . . . . -93 

During Course . . . . . .127 

Living in 1903 

Graduates . . . . . .88 

Non-graduates . . . . .28 

Total 116 

Deaths 

Claflin, Ellison, Johnson, Mason, Silliman, 
Stebbins ... ... 6 

Allen, Hendrickson, Hugh McKee Jones, 
Oliver, Reed ...... 5 



Married 

Adams, Ayer, Backus, Bancroft, Bardwell, 
D. L. ; Boyden, Bridgman, Byington, Ca- 
hoon, Chesley, Clapp, Comins, Comstock, 
Cotton, Cushman, Derebey, Dyer, Fair- 
bank, Field, Fitts, Foster, G. B.; Fowler, 
French, E. W. ; Greenleaf, Griffin, Guernsey, 
Hallett, S. W.; Hallett, W. L.; Hamilton, 
Hamlin, Hatch, Holcombe, Holt, Houghton, 
Howland, Hyde, Kendall, Kingman, Lew, 
Low, McFarland, Manning, Marsh, Morse, 
Nash, H. C, Jr.; Nash, W. K.; Newell, Nich- 
ols, Orr, W. ; Owen, Parsons, Patton, Pen- 
nock, Pratt, Rainey, Rhees, Rounds, Rugg, 
A. P.; Rugg, G. ; Semple, Simonds, Sprout, 
Stuart, Tuttle, C. A.; Walker, W.; Warren, 
Washburn, Whitaker, Whitcomb, Whittlesey 70 



74 



RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

Atwater, Bardwell, C. M.; Blanke, Cochran, 
French, C. E.; Goodwin, Herrick, Hopkins, 
Jewett, Jones, Kirby, N. H.; Kirby, W. D.; 
Kitchin, Krikorian, Leonard, Levonian, 
Mitchell, Norton, Orr, E. S.; Perry, Smith, 
CD.; Wheelwright .... 



Theology 

Butler, Byington, Clapp. Dyer, Fairbank, 
Greenleaf, Hatch, Newell, Patton, Pennock, 
Washburn ...... 

Goodwin, Wheelwright .... 



92 



Children 






Of Graduates 144 


living 


• i3 2 


Of Non-graduates 49 


living 


• 43 



Totals 193 175 

OCCUPATION— 1903 
Business 

Cahoon, Chesley, Comins, Comstock, Cotton, 
Field, Fitts, Foster, G. B.; Fowler, Griffin, 
French, E. W. : Guernsey, Hamilton, Holt, 
Kendall, McFarland, Marsh, Morse, Owen, 
Pratt, Rounds, Saben, Stickney, Stuart, 
Ward, Warren . . . . .26 

Atwater, Blanke, French, C. E.; Jones, E. 
B.; Kirby, W. D.; Kitchin, Mitchell, Norton 
Orr, E. S. ; Palmer, Perry . .11 



37 



13 



class of eighty-three 75 

Law 

Aborn, Adams, Cushman, Holcombe, Hyde, 
Kingman, Knight, Lewis, Nash, H. C, Jr.; 
Rainey, Rugg, A. P.; Semple, Smith, 0.; 
Sprout, Whitaker . . . . 15 

Leonard, Smith, C. D.; Williams . . 3 

18 
Teaching 

Backus, Bardwell, D. L.; Boyden, Callahan, 
Hallett, S. W.; Manning, Nash, W. K.; Orr, 
W.; Parsons, Rhees, Rugg, G. ; Simonds, 
Smith, I. F. ; Tuttle, C. A. ; Walker, W., Whit- 
comb, Whittlesey . . . . 17 

Bardwell, C. M. ; Cochran, Jewett, Levonian 4 



Medicine 

Bancroft, Derebey, Hallett, W. L.; Hamlin, 
Haven, Houghton, Nichols, Rae, Tuttle, G. A . 9 

Herrick, Ho , Hopkins, Kirby, N. H. ; Walker, 
JB 5 



Journalism 

Bridgman, Hooker, Howland, Low, Noyes, 
Peet, Trowbridge ..... 

Levonian ....•• 



Unclassified 

Ayer (civil engineer), Lew (veterinary sur- 
geon), Smith, H. A. (artist) 

Foster, G. W. (?), Smith, L. Jr. (mining) 



14 



76 



RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 

TOTALS AND PER CENTS 



Business 






26 


22 


0% 


11 


9 


8% 


37 


3 1 


9% 


Theology 






11 


9 


8% 


2 ...... 


1 


7% 


13 


1 1 


5% 


Law 






15 


12 


9% 


3 


2 


6% 


18 


iS 


5% 


Teaching 






17 


14 


6% 


4 


3 


4% 


21 ..... 


18 


0% 


Medicine 






9 .... 


7 


7% 


5 


4 


■3% 


14 


12 


•o% 


Journalism 






7 


6 


■o% 


1 ..... 




•8% 


8 


6 


•8% 


Unclassed 






3 


2 


■6% 


2 ..... 


1 


•7% 


5 


4 


3% 


(Percentages are of entire number in 


class.' 





The Nursery 



Emily Marion Adams 

Clinton J. Backus, Jr. 

David Hiram Backus 

Romayne Backus 

Una Backus 

Margaret Bancroft 

Philip Bancroft 
"Richard Bancroft 

Darwin Eugene Bardwell 

Harold E. Bardwell 

Alice Gordon Boy den 

Bartlett Wetherbee Boyden 
.Robert Wetherbee Boyden 

Edwin Bryant Bridgman 

Harriet Bridgman 

Patil Byington 

Ruth Byington 

* Theodore Linn Byington 
Katharine Cahoon 
Louise Cahoon 

Mabel Cahoon 
Solomon Russell Chesley 
*Israel Folsom Chesley 
- Franklin Russell Chesley 
Malcolm Chesley 
Edward Cahoon Claflin 
Stephen Thurston Claflin 
Edward Irving Comins 

* Leonard Clark Comins 
Edith Frances Cotton 
Rachel Ethridge Cotton 
Caroline Cushman 

* Dorothy Cushman 
Chester Howard Derebey 
Franklin Pease Derebey 
Harold Pericles Derebey 
Ruth Elizabeth Dyer 



Allan Melvin Fairbank 
Ruth Elizabeth Fairbank 
Samuel Ballantine Fair- 
bank 
Ruth Alden Field 
Walter Donald Field 
Adela Frances Fitts 
Edwin Brodie Fowler 
Elizabeth Brodie Fowler 
Helen Fowler 
Katharine Fowler 
Margaret Fowler 
George Marshall French 
Olive Louise French 
Annie Elizabeth Greenleaf 
Charles Scott Greenleaf 

-Jonathan Parsons Green- 
leaf 
Artcher Estabrook Griffin 
Carroll Riggs Griffin 
Kenneth Charles Hamilton 
Raymond Noyes Hamilton 

*Helen Winslow Hatch 
Alice Perkins Holcombe 
Harriet Dudley Holcombe 
Louise Brooks Holcombe 
Florence Preston Houghton 
Helene Seymour Houghton 
Henry Seymour Houghton 
Elizabeth Lincoln Hyde 
Phyllis Evangeline Hyde 
Rachel Hubbard Kendall 

*Elizabeth Ramsdell King- 
man 
Joseph Ramsdell King- 
man, Jr. 
Malcolm Fizer McFarland 



RECORD OF TWENTY YEARS 



Mervyn Mason Manning 
. Edward Henry Marsh 
Marion Penelope Marsh 
Morrison Marsh 
Bradbury Bedell Morse 
Carl Gantley Morse 
Josephine Olive Morse 
Clifford Roberts Nash 
Henry Clark Nash, 3d 
Raymond Owen Nash 
Willard Owen Nash 

(children of H. C. N., Jr.) 
Geraldine Lindsay Nash 

(child of W. K. N.) 
Florence Cozad Newell 
Harriet Newell 
Horatio Whitman Newell 
Justus Wellington Newell 

- Alan Gardner Orr 
*Charlotte Reid Orr 

Helen Theresa Orr 
*Philip Gardner Orr 
Knight Owen 
Paul Owen 

- Charles Edwards Parsons 
Edward Smith Parsons, Jr. 
Elizabeth Ingersoll Parsons 
Esther Parsons 

^Josephine Parsons 
Talcott Parsons 
Augusta Patton 
Catharine Patton 
Grace Lavina Pennock 
Helen L. Pennock 
Stuart Wilkins Pratt 
Morgan John Rhees 
Charles Knapp Rounds 
Julia Margaret Rounds 
Louise Ellsworth Rounds 
Arthur Prentice Rugg, Jr. 
- Charles Belcher Rugg 



* Donald Sterling Rugg 
Esther Cynthia Rugg 

(children of A. P. R.) 
Charles Parks Rugg 
Gertrude Rogers Rugg 

(children of G. R.) 
Albert Goodnough Simonds 
Alice Frances Simonds 
Elizabeth Sarah Simonds 
Esther Simonds 
John Marion Simonds 

*Ruth Simonds 
William Adams Simonds 

*Ethelwyn C. Sprout 
William Bradford Sprout, 

Jr. 
John Stebbins 
"Henry Martin Stebbins 
Vernette Maydole Stebbins 
Kimberley Stuart 
Elizabeth Mary Affa Tuttle 

■ Miner Worthington Tuttle 

(children of C. A. T.) 
Aurelia Walker 
Elizabeth Walker 
Frank Dale Warren, Jr. 
Mary Warren 
Almy Dwight Washburn 
Lawrence Gould Washburn 
Ralph Seelye Washburn 
Ruth Emery Washburn 
Walter Baily Chaffin 

Washburn 
Richard E. Whi taker 
John Leonard Whitcomb 
Rachel Gray Whitcomb 
Ludella Miriam Whittlesey 
Ralph Edward Whittlesey 
Raymond Charles 

Whittlesey 
Roland Denning Whittlesey 



CLASS OF EIGHTY-THREE 



79 



David Hay Atwater 
— John Jacob Atwater 

Margaret Hay Atwater 
—William Cutler Atwater, Jr. 

Anna Laura Bardwell 

Conrad Myron Bardwell, 

. J r - 
Richard Woleben Bardwell 

Robert Cousins Bardwell 

Donald Blanke 

Mary Duffield Goodwin 

Edith Jewett 
*Eddie Jewett 

Helen Jewett 

Alden Bliss Jones 

Alister Ross Jones 

Gurdon Blodgett Jones 

Miriam M. Jones 
* Pauline Fales Jones 

Barbara Kirby 

(child of W. D. K.) 

Bernard Lee Kitchin 

Edith Carlotta Kitchin 

Esmond Furbeck Kitchin 

Howard William Kitchin 

Albert Krikorian 

Ephronia Loucia Krikorian 



*Pyzant Socrates Krikorian 
Terouant Movses Krikorian 
Vahran Rodolph Krikorian 

*Charlotte A. Leonard 
Curtis Woodbury Leonard 
Dorothy Leonard 
Hartford Leonard 
Perl Richardson Leonard 
Bysant Asadoor Levonian 
Julia Catherine Levonian 
Mari Hargoohi Levonian 

-John Houston Mitchell 

*Edward Bacon Norton 
Henry Edward Adams 

Norton 
James Arthur Norton 
Richard Allen Norton 

^Florence May Oliver 
Francis Bachelder Oliver 
Robert Nelson Oliver 
Edward Burr Orr 
Katherine Orr 
Dorcas Smith 
Helen E. Smith 

(children of C. P. S.) 
Grace Adams Wheelwright 



* Deceased. 



uiDn«ni vjr oununcss 





